Santa Margarita Catholic must replace two starters up front, including Rivals100 selection and USC signee Max Tuerk. And even without those guys, it should head into the fall with arguably as much Division-I talent as any high school offensive line in the nation.

"We'll still be solid," Santa Margarita Catholic offensive tackle Riley Sorenson said. "Replacing Max is a burden, but we'll definitely still be good."

Sorenson may be underselling his line's prospects just a bit. All three returning starters on Santa Margarita Catholic's line have Pac-12 offers.

Notable: Although Bunte is projected as an offensive tackle in college, Bunte actually played guard for his high school team last year while 2012 USC signee Max Tuerk and Riley Sorenson` lined up at tackle. He likely will stay at guard this fall. Bunte verbally committed to UCLA on March 14.

Quotable: "I think he's going to move outside this year, and that's probably his more natural position. He's a physical kid. He's definitely not totally developed yet. I think moving to tackle is going to give him some challenges in the sense he hasn't played a lot there, especially last year. But with his size alone, he's had some great coaching at the high school level and with more coaching at the college level, he could really emerge there.''- Rivals.com West recruiting analyst Adam Gorney

Quotable: "A lot of people think Crane might be their best offensive lineman. He could play guard. He's talented enough to play guard if you need to. He's another big kid. Big legs. Big arms. He's a guy who's gotten some pretty big offers really and could be a pretty good pickup for Washington.''- Rivals.com West recruiting analyst Adam Gorney

Notable: Sorenson plays tackle in high school, but he could end up at either tackle or guard in college. He also plays high school basketball. Sorenson has received offers from California, Colorado, San Diego State, SMU, Washington and Washington State.

Quotable: "He's a physical kid who uses his hands really well. Sometimes he gets beat more than you'd like to see, but he's definitely a kid with a lot of size and who should really develop.''- Rivals.com West recruiting analyst Adam Gorney

The Rivals.com database lists Bunte as 6-foot-7 and 310 pounds, Sorenson as 6-5 and 320 and Crane at 6-3 and 313. Santa Margarita Catholic coach Harry Welch indicated Bunte and Sorenson have since bulked up to 330 pounds, while Crane weighs 308.

Santa Margarita Catholic's new starters on the line also measure up, at least from a physical standpoint.

"The parents are all buying stock in Costco, Smart & Final and Albertson's," Santa Margarita Catholic assistant coach Jay Noonan quipped. "I speak to the moms all the time and they're saying, 'These kids are eating us out of the house.' ''

They have plenty of skill to go along with their size.

For instance, Sorenson plays basketball as well as football. The footwork he shows on the basketball floor has enabled him to make the most of his size on the football field.

Sorenson says playing one sport has helped his performance in the other.

"They kind of complement each other," Sorenson said.

Sure, he can physically dominate most of the guys who match up against him. But he doesn't use his size as a crutch. He also has plenty of athleticism.

"He can pass block like the very best," Welch said. "He's a proverbial wall. He's very good with his hands and feet, and he has the athleticism from being a basketball player. And he's a really good student."

Sorenson isn't the only versatile lineman on this team.

Bunte likely will play offensive tackle in college, yet he actually spent most of his time at guard last season and will probably end up there again this fall. He is rated as the nation's No. 31 tackle in the 2013 recruiting class.

"When you start off with having the physical presence he has, and you add having good hands and good basic athleticism and a good brain, it's not a bad combination," Welch said.

Crane may represent the most noteworthy example.

Welch notes that coaches from about 30 different schools have told him Crane is a prototypical Division-I center. Rivals rates him as the No. 4 center prospect in the entire 2013 recruiting class.

Yet the Washington-bound recruit likely will move over to tackle this fall to fill the spot Tuerk manned last season. Crane means so much to this team that Welch wants him at the most important position on the line.

"They write movies and write books about playing left tackle," Welch said. "In the NFL, the left tackles make the big money, and there's a reason for that. You put your best guy at left tackle. You'd better protect the quarterback's blind side. You could have a great center, but if the quarterback's on his tush or banged up, you don't have much of an offense."

Crane and Co. should help Santa Margarita Catholic have quite a potent offense this season. After all, the presence of four major-conference prospects made Santa Margarita Catholic's offensive line virtually unstoppable last year.

Tuerk, Bunte, Crane and Sorenson helped the Eagles win the California Interscholastic Federation Division I bowl championship and finish 31st in the RivalsHigh 100 national rankings last season. That line also featured Cole Luther, who is graduating this summer.

"We did really feel [last year] we could beat any single line that you could throw at us," Sorenson said. "As long as we were on our game, we couldn't really lose."

With three Pac-12 prospects on the line, Santa Margarita Catholic should be tough to beat again this fall.

POWER POSITIONS: WHAT IT'S ABOUT

As we head into the summer, we've decided to look ahead to the 2012 fall
football season by rating which high schools have the best prospects at each
position unit. Here is the series schedule: